Community Corner
What Is Wisconsin's 'New Normal' When Children Go Back To School?
Barely a month from the first day of the fall semester, some school districts are backing away from starting the year with in-person classes

By Erik Gunn
What are the choices that confront parents, school districts and communities this fall, as the first day of the school year draws near and the COVID-19 pandemic shows no signs of abating?
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Barely a month from the first day of the fall semester, some school districts are backing away from starting the year with in-person classes. Teachers unions are campaigning against returning to the classroom without stronger health and safety protections β and until the country can tamp down the spread of SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for COVID-19.
Meanwhile, from Education Secretary Betsy DeVos on down to some state legislators comes an insistent cry for school to go forward the way itβs always been. While it seems unlikely to pass, newly elected 7th District U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany (R-Minocqua) is cosponsoring a bill in Congress that would pull federal funding from schools that donβt open in person by Sept. 8.
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Republican lawmakers and suburban Milwaukee school superintendents drew up a document in mid-July taking a more flexible stance. Their plan prefers in-person classes, but declares that βschool reopening decisions should be informed based upon current health dataβ; it allows for online instruction βwhen virtual learning is a necessary precautionβ or the preference of individual families.
βThere is no one-size-fits-all plan for our schools,β Sen. Alberta Darling (R-River Hills) stated, summarizing that report, βbut these guidelines outline the priorities of getting kids back to school, back into the classrooms, and back to normalcy.β
βBack to normalβ is at the core of many arguments for resuming in-person teaching. Arguments for equity are, too.
βBeyond supporting the educational development of children and adolescents, schools play a critical role in addressing racial and social inequity,β the American Association of Pediatrics (AAP) states in a guidance document the organization issued in late June. βAs such, it is critical to reflect on the differential impact SARS-CoV-2 and the associated school closures have had on different races, ethnic and vulnerable populations.β
While the AAP report details at length steps schools will need to take for safe in-person operations, the medical association βstrongly advocates that all policy considerations for the coming school year should start with a goal of having students physically present in school.β
The calculus, though, is more complex than a binary choice of learning vs. health, or equity vs. safety, says Gloria Ladson-Billings, an emerita professor with the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Educationβs Department of Curriculum and Instruction. And βgetting back to normalβ is the wrong goal.
βNormal is the place where the problem was for a number of kids,β says Ladson-Billings, who is president of the National Academy of Education. The pandemic has uncovered longstanding βsocial and economic inequities. A specific group of kids were not doing well in school as it was. I think going back to that is not a remedy.β
A βhard reset'
Ladson-Billlings doesnβt deny that the switch to virtual education in the spring was fraught with challenges β for children who had struggled in school and their families, but also for those who had been accustomed to success. In looking toward a virtual start in the fall, βif the presumption is that they wonβt suffer at all, I think thatβs erroneous.β
The academic gap that separates children by race and class is likely to be βexacerbated by the fact that many of the kids who have struggled also have parents who fall into that category we call essential workers,β she adds β from bus drivers and grocery clerks to nursing home workers and hospital custodians: βTheir ability to just sit with their kids and convey the academic aspect of it is going to be severely compromised.β
Cynthia Ellwood is a former Milwaukee Public School elementary school principal and high school teacher who now teaches at Marquette Universityβs College of Education, where sheβs director of graduate studies.
βLow-income parents need to go to work,β Ellwood says. βAnd thatβs a safety issue for children, if their parents are not there or if they end up in day care, where we donβt have the opportunity to give kids the social distancing and some of the support that they might need.β
In their distinctive ways, both Ellwood and Ladson-Billings challenge the premise of simply pitting health against educational equity.
βThose things need to be considered side by side, and not be set up in some kind of opposition all the time,β Ellwood says.
Ladson-Billings says this is an opportunity for βa hard resetβ in education. Sheβs taken to quoting from a recent essay by the author Arundhati Roy. βShe says that historically pandemics have forced humans to break with the past and to imagine their world anew β and that this one is no different. Itβs a portal, itβs a gateway, between one world and the next.β
Itβs important to remember that school is not only for learning academics, she says.
βIf we are going to center the argument only on the academic, I think we are missing the point about what schools actually do, to create a level of socialization,β says Ladson-Billings. βThatβs important for the citizen-building goals of schools that will bring them together in the first place, in a democratic society β to suggest that they learn how to get along with a whole lot of different people, as well as learning multiple perspectives.β
Learning doesnβt stop
And learning doesnβt stop just because school looks different β or ends up not operating at all. βHuman beings are learners,β Ladson-Billings says. That learning has continued even as kids went home in March for the rest of the school year, although the lessons might not wind up on the state assessments.
βOne of the things that kids are learning is that society is deeply divided,β she says. βOne of the things weβre learning is that itβs inequitable β and itβs been that way for a long time. And people are upset and angry.β
Ellwood agrees. βWe should not be backing off on the kind of equity attention that we may have already begun,β she says. And whether the classroom is in-person or an online portal, educators need to think about how to make the experience βmore responsive to every child.β
Some of that begins with bringing parents into the picture as schools consider how to go forward, says Ellwood. Surveys and listening sessions are a start, but if schools are βfailing to differentiate within the voices of those parents, they are failing to look at the safety of all children,β she cautions. βIf they were to differentiate among the parents, then they could deal with both safety and equity at the same time.β
In practical terms, Ellwood says, as schools consider how they might shift their staffing to meet new needs resulting from the pandemic, they will need to take into account the needs of all families. They also can look at new options in how they do what they do.
Are there ways to reassign school paraprofessionals, the people who assist in classrooms or at recess or in the lunchroom, for example?
βSo we have people that need this employment, that know our children, and they could be spread out over the building, just as children are spread out over the building,β Ellwood continues. βBy considering both parents and kids simultaneously, and by considering safety and equity simultaneously, I think we actually can come up with some solutions that are really good for both.β
Connecting with students and the community
If school ends up being away from school, Ladson-Billings says, there are other community resources that can be tapped to make education a community-wide engagement.
βWe should not be operating in these silos,β she says. βInstead of thinking of these other organizations, whether itβs a library, or a community center, as βafter school,β from now on, these are co-partners with schools.β If health concerns lead schools to institute just part-time schedules in the classroom, βthese other institutions need to say, βOK, and this is what weβre doing on these other days in concert with you.ββ
Ladson-Billings recalls a recent conversation with a school administrator in Virginia.
βShe said, βWhat the pandemic is showing me is how much more important our kidsβ social, emotional and mental health needs are. And Iβm not the least bit worried about reading and mathematics assessment β Iβm worried that we are not helping our kids grow into healthy human beings. And thatβs what our focus is on β and I need to do the same thing for the adults in my building, my teachers.ββ
Building that sort of personal connection was behind a practice that one of Ellwoodβs graduate students implemented in her middle-school classroom last year β then adopted to the virtual classroom when her school building closed in March.
Before the pandemic, Kenosha math teacher Emily Carton instituted a new ritual for her homeroom students: a daily question she would pose for them to ponder and react to. Some were reflective, such as highs and lows from the weekend, and others whimsical, like βwould you rather be a doll or a chicken?β Carton says.
βIt really became something that they would look forward to, and a way for us to check in with each other and also to build trust with one another,β she says.
After everyone was sent home for the rest of the spring semester, she tweaked the ritual for online use, distributing the question to her students with the help of a reminder app on their phones.
βAnd it was a nice way for me to check in to see, like, whoβs really struggling,β says Carton. βOr whoβs doing well, what are they doing to do well β and it was just a nice way to feel centered.β
That sort of activity βadmits kidsβ lives into the classroom,β says Ellwood. βAnd I think thatβs a really important equity issueβ β because it must make room for the wide variety of experiences children have.
βBlack kids have experienced this summer in a very different way than white kids,β says Ellwood. βAnd both sets of kids have seen George Floyd killed on TV over and over and over again. That is a part of their lives in which really rich learning can happenβ¦. The curriculum more than ever needs to admit kidsβ lives into the classroom.β
As a teacher, says Emily Carton, whether online or in the classroom, βour job is not just to teach kids. It is also to look after their well-being. And so thatβs where this activity falls in. And I fully plan to do this next year whether we are virtual or in person.
βYou have to build a human-to-human connection,β Carton continues. βIβm not just somebody who spits out math lessons for students to complete and only cares about equations all day long. I care about who my students are as people, I care about what they like. I care about their fears. I care about what makes them happy βand that has to be done first.
βAnd if that takes a little bit longer, then thatβs just something that has to be done in order to equitably reach all students.β
This story was originally published by the Wisconsin Examiner. For more stories from the Wisconsin Examiner, visit WisconsinExaminer.com.